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Multiple Access

Multiple Access. An Engineering Approach to Computer Networking. What is it all about?. Consider an audioconference where if one person speaks, all can hear if more than one person speaks at the same time, both voices are garbled How should participants coordinate actions so that

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Multiple Access

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  1. Multiple Access An Engineering Approach to Computer Networking

  2. What is it all about? • Consider an audioconference where • if one person speaks, all can hear • if more than one person speaks at the same time, both voices are garbled • How should participants coordinate actions so that • the number of messages exchanged per second is maximized • time spent waiting for a chance to speak is minimized • This is the multiple access problem

  3. Some simple solutions • Use a moderator • a speaker must wait for moderator to call on him or her, even if no one else wants to speak • what if the moderator’s connection breaks? • Distributed solution • speak if no one else is speaking • but if two speakers are waiting for a third to finish, guarantee collision • Designing good schemes is surprisingly hard!

  4. Outline • Contexts for the problem • Choices and constraints • Performance metrics • Base technologies • Centralized schemes • Distributed schemes

  5. Contexts for the multiple access problem • Broadcast transmission medium • message from any transmitter is received by all receivers • Colliding messages are garbled • Goal • maximize message throughput • minimize mean waiting time • Shows up in five main contexts

  6. Contexts

  7. Contexts

  8. Solving the problem • First, choose a base technology • to isolate traffic from different stations • can be in time domain or frequency domain • Then, choose how to allocate a limited number of transmission resources to a larger set of contending users

  9. Outline • Contexts for the problem • Choices and constraints • Performance metrics • Base technologies • Centralized schemes • Distributed schemes

  10. Choices • Centralized vs. distributed design • is there a moderator or not? • in a centralized solution one of the stations is a master and the others are slaves • master->slave = downlink • slave->master = uplink • in a distributed solution, all stations are peers • Circuit-mode vs. packet-mode • do stations send steady streams or bursts of packets? • with streams, doesn’t make sense to contend for every packet • allocate resources to streams • with packets, makes sense to contend for every packet to avoid wasting bandwidth

  11. Constraints • Spectrum scarcity • radio spectrum is hard to come by • only a few frequencies available for long-distance communication • multiple access schemes must be careful not to waste bandwidth • Radio link properties • radio links are error prone • fading • multipath interference • hidden terminals • transmitter heard only by a subset of receivers • capture • on collision, station with higher power overpowers the other • lower powered station may never get a chance to be heard

  12. The parameter ‘a’ • The number of packets sent by a source before the farthest station receives the first bit

  13. Outline • Contexts for the problem • Choices and constraints • Performance metrics • Base technologies • Centralized schemes • Distributed schemes

  14. Performance metrics • Normalized throughput • fraction of link capacity used to carry non-retransmitted packets • example • with no collisions, 1000 packets/sec • with a particular scheme and workload, 250 packets/sec • => goodput = 0.25 • Mean delay • amount of time a station has to wait before it successfully transmits a packet • depends on the load and the characteristics of the medium

  15. Performance metrics • Stability • with heavy load, is all the time spent on resolving contentions? • => unstable • with a stable algorithm, throughput does not decrease with offered load • if infinite number of uncontrolled stations share a link, then instability is guaranteed • but if sources reduce load when overload is detected, can achieve stability • Fairness • no single definition • ‘no-starvation’: source eventually gets a chance to send • max-min fair share: will study later

  16. Outline • Contexts for the problem • Choices and constraints • Performance metrics • Base technologies • Centralized schemes • Distributed schemes

  17. Base technologies • Isolates data from different sources • Three basic choices • Frequency division multiple access (FDMA) • Time division multiple access (TDMA) • Code division multiple access (CDMA)

  18. FDMA • Simplest • Best suited for analog links • Each station has its own frequency band, separated by guard bands • Receivers tune to the right frequency • Number of frequencies is limited • reduce transmitter power; reuse frequencies in non-adjacent cells • example: voice channel = 30 KHz • 833 channels in 25 MHz band • with hexagonal cells, partition into 118 channels each • but with N cells in a city, can get 118N calls => win if N > 7

  19. TDMA • All stations transmit data on same frequency, but at different times • Needs time synchronization • Pros • users can be given different amounts of bandwidth • mobiles can use idle times to determine best base station • can switch off power when not transmitting • Cons • synchronization overhead • greater problems with multipath interference on wireless links

  20. CDMA • Users separated both by time and frequency • Send at a different frequency at each time slot (frequency hopping) • Or, convert a single bit to a code (direct sequence) • receiver can decipher bit by inverse process • Pros • hard to spy • immune from narrowband noise • no need for all stations to synchronize • no hard limit on capacity of a cell • all cells can use all frequencies

  21. CDMA • Cons • implementation complexity • need for power control • to avoid capture • need for a large contiguous frequency band (for direct sequence) • problems installing in the field

  22. FDD and TDD • Two ways of converting a wireless medium to a duplex channel • In Frequency Division Duplex, uplink and downlink use different frequencies • In Time Division Duplex, uplink and downlink use different time slots • Can combine with FDMA/TDMA • Examples • TDD/FDMA in second-generation cordless phones • FDD/TDMA/FDMA in digital cellular phones

  23. Outline • Contexts for the problem • Choices and constraints • Performance metrics • Base technologies • Centralized schemes • Distributed schemes

  24. Centralized access schemes • One station is master, and the other are slaves • slave can transmit only when master allows • Natural fit in some situations • wireless LAN, where base station is the only station that can see everyone • cellular telephony, where base station is the only one capable of high transmit power

  25. Centralized access schemes • Pros • simple • master provides single point of coordination • Cons • master is a single point of failure • need a re-election protocol • master is involved in every single transfer => added delay

  26. Circuit mode • When station wants to transmit, it sends a message to master using packet mode • Master allocates transmission resources to slave • Slave uses the resources until it is done • No contention during data transfer • Used primarily in cellular phone systems • EAMPS: FDMA • GSM/IS-54: TDMA • IS-95: CDMA

  27. Polling and probing • Centralized packet-mode multiple access schemes • Polling • master asks each station in turn if it wants to send (roll-call polling) • inefficient if only a few stations are active, overhead for polling messages is high, or system has many terminals • Probing • stations are numbered with consecutive logical addresses • assume station can listen both to its own address and to a set of multicast addresses • master does a binary search to locate next active station

  28. Reservation-based schemes • When ‘a’ is large, can’t use a distributed scheme for packet mode (too many collisions) • mainly for satellite links • Instead master coordinates access to link using reservations • Some time slots devoted to reservation messages • can be smaller than data slots => minislots • Stations contend for a minislot (or own one) • Master decides winners and grants them access to link • Packet collisions are only for minislots, so overhead on contention is reduced

  29. Outline • Contexts for the problem • Choices and constraints • Performance metrics • Base technologies • Centralized schemes • Distributed schemes

  30. Distributed schemes • Compared to a centralized scheme • more reliable • have lower message delays • often allow higher network utilization • but are more complicated • Almost all distributed schemes are packet mode (why?)

  31. Decentralized polling • Just like centralized polling, except there is no master • Each station is assigned a slot that it uses • if nothing to send, slot is wasted • Also, all stations must share a time base

  32. Decentralized probing • Also called tree based multiple access • All stations in left subtree of root place packet on medium • If a collision, root <- root ->left_son, and try again • On success, everyone in root->right_son places a packet etc. • (If two nodes with successive logical addresses have a packet to send, how many collisions will it take for one of them to win access?) • Works poorly with many active stations, or when all active stations are in the same subtree

  33. Carrier Sense Multiple Access (CSMA) • A fundamental advance: check whether the medium is active before sending a packet (i.e carrier sensing) • Unlike polling/probing a node with something to send doesn’t have to wait for a master, or for its turn in a schedule • If medium idle, then can send • If collision happens, detect and resolve • Works when ‘a’ is small

  34. Simplest CSMA scheme • Send a packet as soon as medium becomes idle • If, on sensing busy, wait for idle -> persistent • If, on sensing busy, set a timer and try later -> non-persistent • Problem with persistent: two stations waiting to speak will collide

  35. How to solve the collision problem • Two solutions • p-persistent: on idle, transmit with probability p: • hard to choose p • if p small, then wasted time • if p large, more collisions • exponential backoff • on collision, choose timeout randomly from doubled range • backoff range adapts to number of contending stations • no need to choose p • need to detect collisions: collision detect circuit => CSMA/CD

  36. Summary of CSMA schemes

  37. Ethernet • The most widely used LAN • Standard is called IEEE 802.3 • Uses CSMA/CD with exponential backoff • Also, on collision, place a jam signal on wire, so that all stations are aware of collision and can increment timeout range • ‘a’ small =>time wasted in collision is around 50 microseconds • Ethernet requires packet to be long enough that a collision is detected before packet transmission completes (a <= 1) • packet should be at least 64 bytes long for longest allowed segment • Max packet size is 1500 bytes • prevents hogging by a single station

  38. More on Ethernet • First version ran at 3 Mbps and used ‘thick’ coax • These days, runs at 10 Mbps, and uses ‘thin’ coax, or twisted pair (Category 3 and Category 5) • Ethernet types are coded as <Speed><Baseband or broadband><physical medium> • Speed = 3, 10, 100 Mbps • Baseband = within building, broadband = on cable TV • Physical medium: • “2” is cheap 50 Ohm cable, upto 185 meters • “T” is unshielded twisted pair (also used for telephone wiring) • “36” is 75 Ohm cable TV cable, upto 3600 meters

  39. Recent developments • Switched Ethernet • each station is connected to switch by a separate UTP wire • line card of switch has a buffer to hold incoming packets • fast backplane switches packet from one line card to others • simultaneously arriving packets do not collide (until buffers overflow) • higher intrinsic capacity than 10BaseT (and more expensive)

  40. Fast Ethernet variants • Fast Ethernet (IEEE 802.3u) • same as 10BaseT, except that line speed is 100 Mbps • spans only 205 m • big winner • most current cards support both 10 and 100 Mbps cards (10/100 cards) for about $80 • 100VG Anylan (IEEE 802.12) • station makes explicit service requests to master • master schedules requests, eliminating collisions • not a success in the market • Gigabit Ethernet • aims to continue the trend • still undefined, but first implementation will be based on fiber links

  41. Evaluating Ethernet • Pros • easy to setup • requires no configuration • robust to noise • Problems • at heavy loads, users see large delays because of backoff • nondeterministic service • doesn’t support priorities • big overhead on small packets • But, very successful because • problems only at high load • can segment LANs to reduce load

  42. CSMA/CA • Used in wireless LANs • Can’t detect collision because transmitter overwhelms colocated receiver • So, need explicit acks • But this makes collisions more expensive • => try to reduce number of collisions

  43. CSMA/CA algorithm • First check if medium is busy • If so, wait for medium to become idle • Wait for interframe spacing • Set a contention timer to an interval randomly chosen in the range [1, CW] • On timeout, send packet and wait for ack • If no ack, assume packet is lost • try again, after doubling CW • If another station transmits while counting down, freeze CW and unfreeze when packet completes transmission • (Why does this scheme reduce collisions compared to CSMA/CD?)

  44. Dealing with hidden terminals • CSMA/CA works when every station can receive transmissions from every other station • Not always true • Hidden terminal • some stations in an area cannot hear transmissions from others, though base can hear both • Exposed terminal • some (but not all) stations can hear transmissions from stations not in the local area

  45. Dealing with hidden and exposed terminals • In both cases, CSMA/CA doesn’t work • with hidden terminal, collision because carrier not detected • with exposed terminal, idle station because carrier incorrectly detected • Two solutions • Busy Tone Multiple Access (BTMA) • uses a separate “busy-tone” channel • when station is receiving a message, it places a tone on this channel • everyone who might want to talk to a station knows that it is busy • even if they cannot hear transmission that that station hears • this avoids both problems (why?)

  46. Multiple Access Collision Avoidance • BTMA requires us to split frequency band • more complex receivers (need two tuners) • Separate bands may have different propagation characteristics • scheme fails! • Instead, use a single frequency band, but use explicit messages to tell others that receiver is busy • In MACA, before sending data, send a Request to Sent (RTS) to intended receiver • Station, if idle, sends Clear to Send (CTS) • Sender then sends data • If station overhears RTS, it waits for other transmission to end • (why does this work?)

  47. Token passing • In distributed polling, every station has to wait for its turn • Time wasted because idle stations are still given a slot • What if we can quickly skip past idle stations? • This is the key idea of token ring • Special packet called ‘token’ gives station the right to transmit data • When done, it passes token to ‘next’ station • => stations form a logical ring • No station will starve

  48. Logical rings • Can be on a non-ring physical topology

  49. Ring operation • During normal operation, copy packets from input buffer to output • If packet is a token, check if packets ready to send • If not, forward token • If so, delete token, and send packets • Receiver copies packet and sets ‘ack’ flag • Sender removes packet and deletes it • When done, reinserts token • If ring idle and no token for a long time, regenerate token

  50. Single and double rings • With a single ring, a single failure of a link or station breaks the network => fragile • With a double ring, on a failure, go into wrap mode • Used in FDDI

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